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2010 Billabong XXL Ride of the Year Nominees

The 10th Annual Billabong XXL Big Wave Awards will be given away tonight in California, in seven different categories: Ride of the Year, Biggest Wave, Monster Paddle, Monster Tube, Verizon Wipeout, Surfline Performance and Billabong Girls Performance. It has been an epic, El Nino fueled year with a mind-blowing list of nominees. Relatively new mutant slabs, as well as legendary big wave spots are represented, and the performance level has become increasingly cartoonish in scale.

Of course the images and videos speak for themselves, but I’d like to entertain you with some empirical data. Of the five Ride of the Year nominations, one took place in Tahiti (barely making the deadline), two took place in Hawaii, and the final two took place on the very same day in California. Unfortunately, we don’t have any real-time buoy data from Tahiti, but we do have access to the Waimea and Half Moon Bay buoy observations.

On December 7th, 2009 at Waimea Bay, Mark Healey & Shane Dorian both caught the same, monstrous closeout. A day later, during the Quiksilver in Memory of Eddie Aikau, Ramon Navarro earned a perfect 100 points for his backside bomb. Looking at the Waimea Bay buoy, we can see that when the swell peaked on December 7th, the swell height was 19.4 feet at 18.2 seconds. The next day, the swell height actually peaked a bit higher at 19.7 feet, but at a lower period of 16.7 seconds. Now, the exact time of each ride is most likely a bit earlier than swell peak, but the wave energy for each is pretty close.

The next two nominees occurred on February 13th, 2010 at Mavericks. On that day, Shane Dorian earned his second Ride of the year nomination with this pre-contest barrel. Later, during the event, Grant Baker entered his name into the running. Taking a look at the Half Moon Bay buoy observations from that day, you can see there were two distinct peaks to the swell. A 21.7 feet at 16.7 seconds reading was recorded at 9 a.m., and a 22 feet at 16.7 seconds observation at 2 p.m.

Now these readings are just averages, and some waves within a swell are larger than average, so judge the video not the data. In addition, each location is subject to unique variables that influence wave height and shape, such as swell direction and local bathymetry. However, it is interesting to see how the data stacks up, and having a visual reference from the actual day provides a tangible reference.

There’s no doubt the surf will be massive when a buoy reads 22 feet at 16.7 seconds, but what about 6 feet at 14 seconds? Or 8 feet at 8 seconds? We’re working on implementing some features to help with this, and provide that valuable point of reference so you can begin to develop your own buoy awareness.

You may not have the gusto to glide onto the cover of Surfing when the Waimea buoy hits 16.7 feet at 20 seconds (like it did on Christmas), but at least you’ll understand what that looks like.

Eddie Went - George Downing’s Epic Call at Waimea

The 2009-2010 Quiksilver Eddie Aikau contest at Waimea Bay was definitely one for the books. If you were lucky enough to be on the North Shore of Oahu, it truly was a spectacle to behold. Hype prior the event was unprecedented, and excellent web and television coverage during the event delivered the action to millions of people.

There were some anxious moments however, when the Northwest Kauai Buoy (Buoy 51001) looked to have peaked overnight, dropping from 22 feet to 16 feet in primary swell height by 2 a.m. Tuesday morning. At dawn Waimea was much smaller than its peak on Monday.

The swell was modeled to pulse again however, and at 7 a.m. Buoy 51001 had rebounded to 19.7 feet at 16 seconds. With about an 8-10 hour travel time to Waimea, this meant the afternoon heats would reap the benefits. In fact, both of the perfect 100-point scores occurred in the final heat of the day.

Taking advantage of the deteriorating morning conditions, Kelly Slater charged out to a big lead, managing to secure a few early bombs. By the second and third heats, the waves had dropped significantly, and it looked like Kelly would walk away with the victory. The swell continued to stall for a few hours, but by mid-afternoon the second pulse began to arrive.

Greg Long used the building surf to secure his win in the final heat, taking all four scores to edge Kelly by ten points. Ramon Navarro walked away with $10,000 for his Monster Drop, also in the final heat (full results are available here).

In the end, it was a gutsy, veteran call by George Downing to hold off on Monday and run the Eddie on Tuesday. The swell was a bit smaller, but Tuesday’s conditions were far superior. Congrats to all the contestants… Eddie went!